Early Samuel Beckett manuscript sells for $1.4M

An undated photo made available by Sotheby’s showing part of a set of Samuel Beckett's exercise books containing the heavily reworked text of the his novel Murphy, as well as notes, doodles and sketches of figures including James Joyce and Charlie Chaplin. (Sotheby's/Associated Press)

Sotheby's says the manuscript of Irish writer Samuel Beckett's first novel has sold at auction for almost one million pounds ($1.5 million).

Britain's University of Reading bought Murphy, written in 1935-36, for 962,500 pounds ($1.4 million) at Wednesday's sale.

The six exercise books contain the heavily reworked text of the novel as well as notes, doodles and sketches of figures including James Joyce and Charlie Chaplin.

Its many revisions give insights into Beckett's creative process. There are eight rejected versions of the novel's opening line — "The sun shone, having no alternative, on the nothing new."

The university's vice chancellor, David Bell, said acquiring the manuscript "will provide unparalleled opportunities to learn more about one of the greatest writers in living memory, if not all time."

The Nobel Prize winner, who died in 1989, is best known for his absurdist play, Waiting for Godot.